[Cross-posted] As if Britain wasnât already sufïŹciently heading down the V for Vendetta path (remember how last year, Mr Brown seized Icelandic funds on the grounds of terrorismâanyone know an Icelandic terrorist?), along comes amendments to the big catch-all Counter-Terrorism Act 2008 where people could be arrested and imprisoned if they take a photograph of ofïŹcers âlikely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorismâ, says the British Journal of Photography.
Anything could really qualify, couldnât it? A journalist taking a photograph for a newspaper might fall foul of the provision. One time I photographed two French policemen hassling a street vendor. I never published it but it struck me that the gentleman was being hassled because he was black.
Could this be helpful to a terrorist? Probably. While my motives were to document possible racism, a terrorist could use this image to show the prejudice against non-whites in the west and encourage attacks on the occident. Lucky I didnât take the photo in Britain then.
Equally a photograph of Big Ben with a police ofïŹcer in front could be helpful to terrorists in ïŹguring out just where policemen walked on their beat. Tourists beware. You could become a crook after taking pics of HM Life Guards (no, not the BaywatchâAlerte Ă Malibu sort).
âSet to become law on 16 February, the Counter-Terrorism Act 2008 amends the Terrorism Act 2000 regarding offences relating to information about members of armed forces, a member of the intelligence services, or a police ofïŹcer,â says the Journal.
âThe new set of rules, under section 76 of the 2008 Act and section 58A of the 2000 Act, will target anyone who âelicits or attempts to elicit information about (members of armed forces) âŠ which is of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorismâ.â
Someone found guilty could be liable for 10 yearsâ imprisonment and a ïŹne.
This goes to the heart of civil liberties in the United Kingdom, something already eroded over the years by the European Union and now, under the guise of anti-terrorism. If it were proposed in the United States, some would label it as âun-Americanâ, striking at the heart of their First Amendment. Well, this is un-British. Forgive me for having a memory, but when Britain was a regular terror target during the Troublesâwhen Britons were being blown up by the IRAâno such laws were required and the country muddled through.
Policies regarded as anathema when I was a child, such as a UK identity card, are now accepted; this is merely another in a long line of Labour policies of late that leave me unsurprised at the number of UK immigrants to New Zealand. Many are documented regularly at Alfred the Ordinaryâs blog, which actually has a V for Vendetta (movie) line in its header. It is becoming more appropriate by the day unless the British public stands upâand recent events have shown that, in the words of Bob the Builder (in Neil Morrisseyâs ïŹnest hour?), âYes we can.â

Above: The late Ruth Handler, Barbieâs creator, admires her creation at its 40th anniversary celebration at F. A. O. Schwarz in New York, March 9, 1999. At the time, two Barbie dolls were sold per second.

Mattelâs Barbie doll celebrates its 50th anniversary on March 9, 2009.
Barbie was launched at the New York Toy Fair on March 9, 1959, named after the daughter of Ruth Handler, president of Mattel. It was inspired by the Bild Lilli doll, which had become famous in Germany earlier in the 1950s, which Mrs Handler saw during a trip to Switzerland.
Mattel has been reaching out to the fashion press, with one of the press release quotations reading, âInspiring over four generations of women and girls, at any given moment in history Barbie is a reﬂection of the times and always culturally relevant. She is on-trend and classic. She is always distinctly, unapologetically âŠ Barbie.â
Do readers have any Barbie memories they would care to share? Is she a harmless toy or a harmful icon? A toy that helps girls aspire, or one that holds them to an unfair ideal?

Weâve had a few chats lately to readers about shoesâespecially ones with prints and how they would make more of a comeback.
We were very interested to see the Hetty Rose collection for the springâsummer season. Embroidery and kimono fabricsâsome are vintage and recycled, sourced from Japanâare the hallmarks of this new collection. The look is less feminine and more chunky. The collection, in our view, ﬁts with the yearâs trend and some of the fashions weâve seen for springâsummer worldwide.

Above: Steve Ferguson in Jayshri Gandaâs T-shirt design; Miriama Kamo in CybĂšle; Maria Tutaia in Stolen Girlfriendsâ Club. Below: TV personality and the star of last yearâs acclaimed The Jaquie Brown Diaries, Jaquie Brown, in Karen Walker.
Glassons has released its 2009 T-shirts beneﬁting the Breast Cancer Research Trust in New Zealand.
Participating designers are Karen Walker, Kate Sylvester, Trelise Cooper, Zambesi,
CybĂšle, Ruby and, for the ﬁrst time, Stolen Girlfriendsâ Club. Two members of the public have also created T-shirts: Louise Clarke of Auckland and Jayshri Ganda of Christchurch.
This yearâs theme is Think Cure and Play Your Part, and the T-shirts went on sale January 21. They will remain on sale for a few months.
A total of NZ$3Â·2 million has been raised for BCRT over the last seven years through the campaign.

First Lady Michelle Obama selected jewellery from American designer Loree Rodkin for her inauguration outﬁt.
Rodkin created jewellery for Mrs Obama for election night, the Inaugural Concert, the Kidsâ Inaugural Concert and the Inaugural Ball.
The pieces will become part of the Smithsonian Institutionâs permanent collection.
Rodkin says she found the First Ladyâs choice of her designs ﬁtting. âFor three years I have ended all of my emails with, âChange is the only constant.â Itâs ﬁtting my designs are now associated with First Lady, Michelle Obama,â she said in a release.

I am a big fan of this artist, who only gets better and better as the years pass. Had the pleasure of visiting Kappâs latest installation of work completed in 2008 at the opening in Santa Monica last night, and found the canvases as durable and surprising as ever. His colour palette evolves with deep layers of paint, scraped back, overpainted, rubbed out again, an archaeology in nuances of cool blues, greys, mauves, taupes, contrasted by piercing stabs of oranges and reds. The theme image, Square Crowd, is a tour de force of gestural paint applied in large scaleâtoo late to grab it, as it quickly soldâthough Chinatown (Age of Man), a 60-by-48-inch allegory has seductive content and some racy visual wit along with an adventurous composition. Thereâs a ﬁne, small work just to the left of the entry, which could easily have been painted by an AbEx artist, if it didnât have the solid trappings of ﬁguration. Mostly itâs a colour ﬁeld painting in modest scale, and a super bargain for a work by one who counts NYCâs Metropolitan Museum of Art as a collector. Thereâs still time to look at the show, which stays up until February 21.âStanley Moss

The Opel Insignia has done very well for GMâsuch a shame it has come while the company is in such a deep crisis. It took home the 2008 Car of the Year award from European journalists, as we reported last year. It has also won the ADAC (German Automobile Association) Gelben Engel award on January 15 in MĂŒnchen, received by Carl-Peter Forster, General Motors VP and President of GM Europe. For those who have not seen the Insignia, below is a new video shot in London.